AI Wedding Invitation Ideas — 12 Copy-and-Paste Prompts
Great prompts aren’t just magic words — they’re a checklist. The more clearly you feed the details (names, date, venue, hosts, dress code, RSVP), the
better your AI output will read on the first try. Use the cards below to generate polished invitation wording in your tone — formal, semi-formal,
informal, funny, modern, or cultural. Replace the variables and paste the prompt into
Wedly AI.
Pro tip: AI is great at format control. Tell it “2 short paragraphs + RSVP line” or “centered layout with line breaks,” and it will comply.
Formal Invitations
Traditional cadence, hosts named, honorifics correct, and full date/time written out.
Classic formal styling: centered type, full date & time written out.
Formal #1 — Parents Hosting (Classic)
Use when one set of parents is hosting. Full names, “request the honour of your presence,” ceremony first.
Variables: [Hosts], [Partner A full name], [Partner B full name], [Date written out], [Time written out], [Venue + city], [Reception line], [Dress code], [RSVP date/link].
Output format: 2 short paragraphs + single RSVP line.
Prompt
Act as a meticulous wedding wording editor. Write a traditional, formal invitation where [Hosts] request the honour of your presence at the marriage of [Partner A full name] and [Partner B full name]. Use formal capitalization and spell out the day, month, year, and time, e.g., “Saturday, the seventeenth of May, two thousand twenty-six, at half past four in the afternoon.” Include:
• Ceremony venue and city
• A separate reception line (“Reception to follow” or specify location)
• Optional dress code in a final line
• One concise RSVP line with date and link
Return 2 short paragraphs plus one RSVP line. Maintain an elegant, respectful tone.
Formal #2 — Both Families Hosting (Balanced)
Use when families share hosting duties; keeps symmetry and formality.
Prompt
Write a formal wedding invitation where both families host: “Together with their families.” Include full names, date/time written out, ceremony venue/city, and a separate reception line. Return 2 paragraphs plus a single RSVP line with deadline. Keep tone refined and timeless.
Formal #3 — House of Worship (Honour spelling)
Use British spelling “honour” when the ceremony is at a religious venue.
Prompt
Create a formal invitation for a ceremony at a house of worship. Use “request the honour of your presence,” spell out the date/time in words, and include venue details. Close with “Reception to follow” and add a discrete dress code line. Return 2 paragraphs + RSVP line.
Semi-formal Invitations
Still polished, but slightly warmer tone and simplified phrasing.
Classic semi-formal styling: centered type, full date & time written out, simple phrasing.
Semi-formal #1 — “Together with their families”
Prompt
Write a semi-formal wedding invitation that opens with “Together with their families,” includes full names, numeric date/time (e.g., June 14, 2026 at 4:30 PM), venue + city, and a friendly reception line. Return 2 short paragraphs + RSVP line. Warm, clear, and modern.
Semi-formal #2 — Hosted by Couple
Prompt
Create a semi-formal invitation hosted by the couple (no parents listed). Use “invite you to celebrate their wedding,” include names, date/time (numerals OK), venue/city, reception to follow, optional dress code, and an RSVP line with link. Return 2 paragraphs + RSVP line.
Informal Invitations
Conversational, friendly, and concise — perfect for backyard, brunch, or micro-weddings.
Informal #1 — Short & Sweet
Prompt
Write a friendly, informal wedding invite in 5–7 lines: first names only, simple date/time, venue + city, and “Reception to follow.” Add one upbeat RSVP line with link and deadline. Keep it warm and concise.
Informal #2 — Brunch Wedding
Prompt
Create an informal brunch-wedding invitation. Mention morning ceremony, daytime dress vibe, coffee & mimosas, and a relaxed reception line. Return 2 short paragraphs + RSVP line. Tone: bright and welcoming.
Funny & Playful Invitations
Keep it witty but clear — guests should laugh and still know where to be, when, and what to wear.
Funny #1 — Light Banter
Prompt
Write a playful wedding invitation with one tasteful joke about finally making it official. Still include names, date/time, venue/city, reception line, and RSVP. Keep humor PG and inclusive. Return 2 short paragraphs + RSVP line.
Funny #2 — Dance-Floor Wink
Prompt
Draft a humorous invitation that teases a great dance floor. Include the essentials (names, date/time, venue, city) and end with a playful RSVP line (“claim your spot on the dance floor”). Keep it classy.
Modern & Minimal
Clean lines, generous white space, and direct language with optional dress code.
Classic formal styling: centered type, full date & time written out.
Modern #1 — Minimalist Two-Paragraph
Prompt
Write a modern minimalist wedding invitation in two short paragraphs. Use first names in headline style, numeric date/time, venue + city, and a separate line for “Reception to follow.” Add optional dress code (e.g., cocktail). End with a compact RSVP line with link.
Cultural & Interfaith
Honor traditions while keeping the details crystal clear.
Classic formal styling: centered type, full date & time written out.
Cultural #1 — Hindu Wedding (Baraat & Reception)
Acknowledges multi-event flow; guests know what to attend and what to wear.
Prompt
Write a respectful Hindu wedding invitation that mentions the baraat, ceremony (vivah), and evening reception. Include venue(s), city, date/time for each, and a brief attire note (traditional or formal). Use warm, inclusive language and end with a simple RSVP line.
Cultural #2 — Interfaith Ceremony
Balances traditions on both sides without heavy religious language.
Prompt
Create an interfaith wedding invitation that honors two traditions without specific doctrinal language. Include names, date/time, venue + city, reception to follow, and a gentle attire line. Return 2 paragraphs + RSVP line. Tone: welcoming and inclusive.
What details to include in every prompt
Names: full names (formal) or first names (informal).
Date/time: words for formal; numerals for modern/semi-formal.
Venue & city: full venue name and location.
Hosts: parents, both families, couple only — choose one.
Reception line: “Reception to follow” or specify location/time.
Dress code: optional, but prevents guesswork (e.g., cocktail).
RSVP: deadline + link/QR; avoid registry text on the main invite.
Registry language belongs on your website or an insert card. For kid-free events, use a soft line like “We love your little ones, but this celebration will be adults-only.”